Word

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A word is the processor’s native data unit. Modern consumer processors have a word width of 64 bits.

Data type

Most run-time libraries provide the native data type of a processor as the Pascal data type word. It is a subset of all whole numbers (non-negative integers) that can be represented by the processor’s natural data unit size.

On a 64-bit architecture this means a word is an integer within the range [math]\displaystyle{ [0,~2^{64}-1] }[/math]. On a 32-bit architecture a word will be an integer in the range [math]\displaystyle{ [0,~2^{32}-1] }[/math], and so on, respectively.

In GNU Pascal a word is just an alias for cardinal, which has the same properties regarding possible values.

If a signed integer having the processor’s native size is wanted, the data type integer provides this functionality.

FPC

Contrary to the data type’s name, in FPC a word is defined as a subrange data type 0..65535. The high value 65535 is [math]\displaystyle{ 2^{16}-1 }[/math]. Thus a system.word occupies two bytes of space. Subrange data types are stored in a quantity that serves best the goals of performance and memory efficiency.

This deviation from the normal usage of the term word in computer science cannot be explained. Instead, one has to use the data type system.ptrUInt if the processor’s native size is desired. This data type has the same properties as a word according to the normal definition, but is more cryptic and unreadable (try pronouncing ptruint).

In FPC a smallInt has the same size as a word.


navigation bar: data types
simple data types

boolean byte cardinal char currency double dword extended int8 int16 int32 int64 integer longint real shortint single smallint pointer qword word

complex data types

array class object record set string shortstring